Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective

A city is a large human settlement that serves the people who live there, and a smart city is a concept of how cities might better serve their residents through new forms of technology. In this paper, we focus on four major smart city domains according to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: smart utility,...

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Main Authors: Fan, Jiani, Yang, Wenzhuo, Liu ,Ziyao, Kang, Jiawen, Niyato, Dusit, Lam, Kwok-Yan, Du, Hongyang
Other Authors: School of Computer Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168033
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1680332023-05-19T15:36:17Z Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective Fan, Jiani Yang, Wenzhuo Liu ,Ziyao Kang, Jiawen Niyato, Dusit Lam, Kwok-Yan Du, Hongyang School of Computer Science and Engineering Strategic Centre for Research in Privacy-Preserving Technologies and Systems Engineering::Computer science and engineering Internet of Things IoT Security A city is a large human settlement that serves the people who live there, and a smart city is a concept of how cities might better serve their residents through new forms of technology. In this paper, we focus on four major smart city domains according to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: smart utility, smart transportation, smart homes, and smart healthcare. Numerous IoT applications have been developed to achieve the intelligence that we desire in our smart domains, ranging from personal gadgets such as health trackers and smart watches to large-scale industrial IoT systems such as nuclear and energy management systems. However, many of the existing smart city IoT solutions can be made better by considering the suitability of their security strategies. Inappropriate system security designs generally occur in two scenarios: first, system designers recognize the importance of security but are unsure of where, when, or how to implement it; and second, system designers try to fit traditional security designs to meet the smart city security context. Thus, the objective of this paper is to provide application designers with the missing security link they may need in order to improve their security designs. By evaluating the specific context of each smart city domain and the context-specific security requirements, we aim to provide directions on when, where, and how they should implement security strategies and the possible security challenges they need to consider. In addition, we present a new perspective on security issues in smart cities from a data-centric viewpoint by referring to the reference architecture, the Activity-Network-Things (ANT)-centric architecture. This architecture is built upon the concept of “security in a zero-trust environment", to achieve end-to-end data security. By doing so, we reduce the security risks posed by new system interactions or unanticipated user behaviors while avoiding the hassle of regularly upgrading security models. National Research Foundation (NRF) Submitted/Accepted version This research is supported by the Singapore National Research Foundation, under its Strategic Capability Research Centres Funding Initiative. Jiani Fan’s research is partly supported by Alibaba Group through Alibaba Innovative Research (AIR) Program and Alibaba-NTU Singapore Joint Research Institute (JRI), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. 2023-05-19T05:40:24Z 2023-05-19T05:40:24Z 2023 Journal Article Fan, J., Yang, W., Liu , Z., Kang, J., Niyato, D., Lam, K. & Du, H. (2023). Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective. IEEE Internet of Things Journal. https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JIOT.2023.3252040 2327-4662 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168033 10.1109/JIOT.2023.3252040 2-s2.0-85149369964 en IEEE Internet of Things Journal © 2023 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works. The published version is available at: https://doi.org/10.1109/JIOT.2023.3252040. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Computer science and engineering
Internet of Things
IoT Security
spellingShingle Engineering::Computer science and engineering
Internet of Things
IoT Security
Fan, Jiani
Yang, Wenzhuo
Liu ,Ziyao
Kang, Jiawen
Niyato, Dusit
Lam, Kwok-Yan
Du, Hongyang
Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
description A city is a large human settlement that serves the people who live there, and a smart city is a concept of how cities might better serve their residents through new forms of technology. In this paper, we focus on four major smart city domains according to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: smart utility, smart transportation, smart homes, and smart healthcare. Numerous IoT applications have been developed to achieve the intelligence that we desire in our smart domains, ranging from personal gadgets such as health trackers and smart watches to large-scale industrial IoT systems such as nuclear and energy management systems. However, many of the existing smart city IoT solutions can be made better by considering the suitability of their security strategies. Inappropriate system security designs generally occur in two scenarios: first, system designers recognize the importance of security but are unsure of where, when, or how to implement it; and second, system designers try to fit traditional security designs to meet the smart city security context. Thus, the objective of this paper is to provide application designers with the missing security link they may need in order to improve their security designs. By evaluating the specific context of each smart city domain and the context-specific security requirements, we aim to provide directions on when, where, and how they should implement security strategies and the possible security challenges they need to consider. In addition, we present a new perspective on security issues in smart cities from a data-centric viewpoint by referring to the reference architecture, the Activity-Network-Things (ANT)-centric architecture. This architecture is built upon the concept of “security in a zero-trust environment", to achieve end-to-end data security. By doing so, we reduce the security risks posed by new system interactions or unanticipated user behaviors while avoiding the hassle of regularly upgrading security models.
author2 School of Computer Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Computer Science and Engineering
Fan, Jiani
Yang, Wenzhuo
Liu ,Ziyao
Kang, Jiawen
Niyato, Dusit
Lam, Kwok-Yan
Du, Hongyang
format Article
author Fan, Jiani
Yang, Wenzhuo
Liu ,Ziyao
Kang, Jiawen
Niyato, Dusit
Lam, Kwok-Yan
Du, Hongyang
author_sort Fan, Jiani
title Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
title_short Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
title_full Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
title_fullStr Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
title_full_unstemmed Understanding security in smart city domains from the ANT-centric perspective
title_sort understanding security in smart city domains from the ant-centric perspective
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168033
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